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25 April 2024

Plane crash actually monster truck's bath time

The truck is powered by three jet engines producing 36,000 horse power. Sheriff's deputies, Strafford Fire Department, and EMS responded to a reported plane crash on Monday in eastern Greene County, Mo. Instead of a downed plane. (AP)

Published
By AP

Ambulances, law enforcement officers and several emergency responders rushed to a property in southwest Missouri upon receiving a report of a possible plane crash.

Instead, they found a man washing his jet-powered semi - named ‘Shockwave’ - on Monday afternoon.

Owner Neal Darnell's new neighbours called 911 after hearing the loud noise and seeing smoke over their tree line.



Darnell said he recently raced the vehicle, which can reach 376 miles per hour, on a dirt course so it needed to be washed on Monday, the Springfield News-Leader reported.

To wash the 36,000-horsepower truck, Darnell has to use its jet engines, which causes a lot of noise and white smoke.

"We do it from time to time and it will usually generate a couple of 911 calls, but today for some reason it brought out a whole army of emergency vehicles," Darnell said. He also said he doesn't blame the neighbours for being concerned.



A Greene County sheriff's deputy told the newspaper that no citations were issued and that the 911 callers had acted in good faith because they believed someone might be in danger.

Darnell said he takes Shockwave to truck shows across the country, where it does things like setting stacks of cars on fire or racing fighter planes.